Edda Mussolini (1 September 1910 – 9 April 1995) was the eldest child of
Benito Mussolini. Upon her marriage she became
Edda Ciano, Countess of Cortellazzo and Buccari.
Early life
She was born out of wedlock to
Benito Mussolini and
Rachele Guidi in
Forlì,
Romagna. Her parents did not marry until December 1915. In her early years, while her father was editor of
Il Popolo d'Italia in Milan, Edda lived with Rachele in Forlì. Her father became Prime Minister of Italy in October 1922 and Dictator after January 1925.
In March 1925, Rachele and Edda with her brothers and sisters, moved from Milan to Carpena and then to Rome in November 1929 to live with their father. Edda was, herself, a wild woman in her youth. Her powerful father made dating difficult, as most young men feared him. She has been described as being opinionated and outspoken. It was while in Rome that she met
Galeazzo Ciano, son of Admiral Count
Costanzo Ciano, a loyal
Fascist and supporter of Benito Mussolini before his
March on Rome. They were married on 24 April 1930 in a lavish ceremony attended by 4,000 guests.
Her husband was appointed
Italian Consul in
Shanghai and it was there their first son, Fabrizio Ciano, was born on 1 October 1931. The couple moved back to
Italy in 1932, where Galeazzo took the post of Minister of Foreign Affairs. By many accounts, theirs was an
open marriage, and both had lovers. However, her father liked Galeazzo and so Ciano's career prospered.
World War II
After the Italian invasion of
Albania in June 1939, the city of Santi Quaranta (
Sarandë in Albanian) was renamed "Porto Edda" in her honour during the annexation.
In July 1939, she was depicted on the front cover of
Time in a feature entitled "Lady of the Axis".
During the
Greco-Italian War, Edda Ciano volunteered for service with the Italian
Red Cross. On 14 March 1941, she was embarked near the Albanian port of Valona (now
Vlorë) on the Lloyd Triestino liner
Po, which had been converted into a hospital ship. British planes attacked and sank the ship, with some loss of life. But Edda managed to survive by swimming to the shore. She continued to work for the Red Cross until 1943.
After Edda's close call in the
Adriatic Sea, Rachele and Benito Mussolini were doubly distressed when her brother,
Bruno, met an untimely death in August of the same year.
Husband's execution
In July 1943, when internal opposition against Mussolini finally emerged in the
Fascist Grand Council, Galeazzo Ciano voted against his father-in-law. For this act, he was arrested for treason, tried and executed on 11 January 1944 (despite Edda's appeals to her father). Mussolini had Galeazzo tied to a chair and shot in the back.
Escape to Switzerland
Edda escaped to
Switzerland on 9 January 1944, disguised as a peasant woman. She managed to smuggle out the Count's wartime diaries, which had been hidden in her clothing by her confidant
Emilio Pucci. At that time he was a lieutenant in the
Italian Air Force but would later find fame as a fashion designer.
[ Detailed CIA history of the events leading up to the Count's death and Edda's flight to Switzerland] War correspondent Paul Ghali of the
Chicago Daily News learned of her secret internment in a Swiss convent and arranged the publication of the diaries. They reveal much of the secret history of the Fascist regime between 1939 and 1943 and are considered a prime historical source. The diaries are strictly political and contain little of the Cianos' personal lives.
After World War II
After returning to Italy from Switzerland, Edda was held in detention on the island of
Lipari and on 20 December 1945 was sentenced to two years' imprisonment for aiding Fascism. After her release she moved to
France, where she wrote her
memoirs.
Her autobiography,
La mia vita, was published in translation as
My Truth by Weidenfeld and Nicolson in 1975.
She died in Rome in 1995.
Miscellaneous
Like many a child born out out-of-wedlock in early 20th century Italy, Edda was registered under her father's name, "mother unknown".
It was widely reported at the time that the daughter of
Hermann Göring and
Emmy Göring (born 2 June 1938) was named Edda after her, but it is now thought that
Edda Göring was named after a friend of her mother's.
A number of films have been made about Edda's life, including
Mussolini and I (1985) in which she was played by
Susan Sarandon.
Her son
Fabrizio Ciano wrote a personal memoir entitled
Quando il nonno fece fucilare papà ("When Grandpa had Daddy Shot").